+
+/// array_pod_sort - This sorts an array with the specified start and end
+/// extent. This is just like std::sort, except that it calls qsort instead of
+/// using an inlined template. qsort is slightly slower than std::sort, but
+/// most sorts are not performance critical in LLVM and std::sort has to be
+/// template instantiated for each type, leading to significant measured code
+/// bloat. This function should generally be used instead of std::sort where
+/// possible.
+///
+/// This function assumes that you have simple POD-like types that can be
+/// compared with std::less and can be moved with memcpy. If this isn't true,
+/// you should use std::sort.
+///
+/// NOTE: If qsort_r were portable, we could allow a custom comparator and
+/// default to std::less.
+template<class IteratorTy>
+inline void array_pod_sort(IteratorTy Start, IteratorTy End) {
+ // Don't dereference start iterator of empty sequence.
+ if (Start == End) return;
+ qsort(&*Start, End-Start, sizeof(*Start),
+ get_array_pod_sort_comparator(*Start));
+}
+
+template <class IteratorTy>
+inline void array_pod_sort(
+ IteratorTy Start, IteratorTy End,
+ int (*Compare)(
+ const typename std::iterator_traits<IteratorTy>::value_type *,
+ const typename std::iterator_traits<IteratorTy>::value_type *)) {
+ // Don't dereference start iterator of empty sequence.
+ if (Start == End) return;
+ qsort(&*Start, End - Start, sizeof(*Start),
+ reinterpret_cast<int (*)(const void *, const void *)>(Compare));